BlizzCon canceled: gaming convention joins list of tech conferences dropped due to pandemic
“We will meet again!”
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
After a few uncertain weeks of trying to decide whether or not to cancel BlizzCon 2020,Blizzardhas finally declared that its annual gaming convention officially canceled – at least for this year.
BlizzCon Executive Producer Saralyn Smith recently took to theBlizzCon websiteto announce that BlizzCon organizers have decided against holding an event this year, citing health and safety concerns as the main reasons. It now joins the long list of tech conferences events that were dropped this year due to the pandemic, includingMobile World Congress,Game Developers ConferenceandGoogle I/O.
Unlike some of those conferences, though, Blizzard won’t be holding a digital alternative in 2020, as Smith noted the company needed more time to adapt the BlizzCon experience to an online event.
BlizzCon, which is typically held in Anaheim, CA, at the Anaheim Convention Center, takes place every year in early November. That may have been far enough in advance to hold off on deciding the fate of the conference, especially with many states and countries starting to open back up. However, after considering different options to follow national and local health guidelines, Blizzard didn’t want to take any chances, Smith noted.
No digital-only event this year, but maybe next?
Blizzard likely won’t hold any digital-only events in lieu of BlizzCon 2020 this year, asMicrosoftdid withBuild 2020, or at the very least, any plans to hold it at a later date like the delayedComputex 2020.
But Smith and her team do seem to be brainstorming alternative ways to “channel the BlizzCon spirit and connect with you in some way online” as well as explore “alternatives for supporting some of the high-level competition that would normally take place at the show.”
Sadly, it doesn’t look like any of those alternatives will take place this year: given the “new-ish territory and the different factors involved” Blizzard is facing, we might have to wait until early next year to see any BlizzCon-related events.
Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.
Sign up to be the first to know about unmissable Black Friday deals on top tech, plus get all your favorite TechRadar content.
It’s not all bad news, however.MMORPGreports that Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick has already assured the gaming community that the publisher is still on track to roll out its planned releases for 2020, including theWorld of Warcraft: Shadowlandsexpansion and the next installation in theCall of Dutyseries.
Michelle Rae Uy is the former Computing Reviews and Buying Guides Editor at TechRadar. She’s a Los Angeles-based tech, travel and lifestyle writer covering a wide range of topics, from computing to the latest in green commutes to the best hiking trails. She’s an ambivert who enjoys communing with nature and traveling for months at a time just as much as watching movies and playing sim games at home. That also means that she has a lot more avenues to explore in terms of understanding how tech can improve the different aspects of our lives.
From Dishonored to Mafia: Definitive Edition, some of my favorite games are free right now for Amazon Prime members
New Secretlab Skins Lite let you overhaul the look of your chair for under $100
OLED vs Mini-LED: which TV type is best?